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Variety:
Asian New Year
Celebrating the
year of the ox.
Page 10
Friday, March 14,1997
Views:
J3age5
Swearing students
Schaap and Joldersma speak
out about being real.
Sports:
MN Gophers
Godfrey says they
haven't won yet.
page 7
IS
%
NEWSPAPER OF BETHEL COLLEGE
Volume 72 • Number 10
UPDATE
Mother of
Swedish
Queen dies
STOCKHOLM, Sweden- Alice de Toledo
Sommerlath, the mother
of Sweden's Queen
Silvia, died Sunday. She
was 90.
The news agency TT
said Sommerlath recently
had been visiting
Drottningholm, the royal
residence, but did notsay
where she had died.
Sommerlath was born
in Brazil, and later married Walther
Sommerlath. From 1946
to 1957 they lived in Sao
Paulo, while Sommerlath
was the managing director of the Brazilian subsidiary of a Swedish steel
company. They then
moved to Germany.
At the 1972 Olympics
in Munich, the couple's
daughter Silvia met
Swedish Crown Prince
Carl Gustaf, who later
became King Carl XVI
Gustaf. Silvia had been
working at the Games as
a translator.
Gasoline
prices fall
LOS ANGELES- Gasoline prices fell nearly a
cent per gallon in the
past two weeks, continuing a months-long
decline caused in part
by lower crude oil
prices, an industry analyst said Sunday.
The average price nationwide, including all
grades and taxes, was
about SI .28 per gallon on
Friday, according to the
Lundberg Survey of
10,000 stations nation
Continued on page 2
Brushaber honored
President recieves award
for editing, writing, study
By Tesha Christensen
Staff Writer
President George K.
Brushaber was hon
ored for nearly 40
years of impacting evangelical
communications and publications with the National Association of Evangelical's 1997
James DeForest Murch award.
Clarion; File Photo
President George Brushaber.
The award, given to
Brushaber on March 5, recognizes his high-minded theological study and gift for writing and editing.
"Sometimes we just think
of him as George," Professor
Roger Olson said at a faculty
celebration for Brushaber.
"Even though George may be
'George' to us, we need to realize and acknowledge he is
'Dr. Brushaber': the eminent
evangelical Christian spokesman, educator, journalist and
scholar."
"[Brushaber] is a man of
integrity. He acts from
within,"said RuthConard,his
administrative assistant.
Brushaber has written or
edited six periodicals since his
college days and currently is a
senior editor of Christianity
Today. He received the James
DeForest Murch Award based
on the following criteria: performed editorial functions for
an evangelical publication
throughout a fruitful career,
maintained a high degree of
excellence of editorial skills,
provided leadership and promoted integrity, motivated
readers through personal and
editorial writing and maintained a clear-cut evangelical
testimony.
The James DeForest Murch
award is named after the first
director of the National Association of Evangelicals with
the same name. A skillful journalist, Murch (1892-1973) was
also a man of integrity. His
deep biblical convictions
drove his work towards harmony and unity among Christians. "I have sought to embody the same convictions and
virtues and to serve the church
as Dr. Murch did," Brushaber
continued on page 3
Individual computer users have created
viruses that attatch themselves to everything.
ClarrorV Naomi Pierre
Freshman Andrea Schultz uses the Eudora program.
Viruses reach all-time high
By Hannah Maria Hayes
Variety Editor
Like the cold viruses we
all avoid catching, computer viruses are spread by
contact with the virus. With
the advant of the Internet,
virus transmittal is at an all-
time high. Most computer
viruses are spread through
the Internet and it is possible to get them by downloading infected files to a
computer or through
emails.
When a contaminated
computer is turned on, the
computer will load the virus, similar to loading a
program. If a disk is in the
computer, it will load the
disk and transfer the virus
to the disk. According to
sophomore Lab Manager
Andrew Jornod, using an
infected disk is "like walking around with a cold;" the
virus is spread.
"The viruses we have
around here are viruses that
aren't going to hurt anything," Jornod said. "They
are basically 'leech' viruses
which were made by some
idiot who wants to see his
program flying around."
This type of virus will not
damage anything but attaches itself to everything.
Junior Mike Lawyer, Personal Relations Supervisor,
said that many times the
virus will attach onto the
program students are trying to use and this leads to
most of the problems
Continued on page 3
British cloning spurs debate in U.S.
By Megan Lawton
Bethel News Editor
Researchers in Britain are
reporting they have cloned an
adult mammal for the first
time in a genetic experiment
that some have eagerly
awaited and others have long
dreaded.
Led by Dr. Ian Wilt-nut, the
scientists at the Rosl in Institute
in Edinburgh created a lamb
named "Dolly" using the
DNA from an adult sheep,
Clarion' Julia Taylor
Bethel clones Lisa and Lori Carlson.
startling many who believed it
could never be done.
The experiment was rela
tively easy: a mammary cell' was extracted from a ewe
and its DNA prepared to be accepted by an egg
from another
sheep. The egg's
own DNA was removed and replaced with the
adult DNA by fusing the egg cell with the adult
cell. The cells, now carrying
the adult DNA, began to grow
and divide as normal to form
an embryo. This embryo was
implanted into another ewe,
which gave birth to the cloned
lamb.
Wilmut says that this will
be used for the production of
more health care products.
This would include pharmacologically useful proteins like
the clotting factor needed by
hemophiliacs and the cloning
of superproducer cows that
produce about three times the
Continued on page 3

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Reproduction or distribution of these files is permitted for educational and research purposes with proper attribution to the Bethel Digital Library. No commercial reproduction or distribution of these files is permitted under copyright law without the written permission of Bethel University Digital Library. For questions or further information on this collection, contact digital-library@bethel.edu.

Variety:
Asian New Year
Celebrating the
year of the ox.
Page 10
Friday, March 14,1997
Views:
J3age5
Swearing students
Schaap and Joldersma speak
out about being real.
Sports:
MN Gophers
Godfrey says they
haven't won yet.
page 7
IS
%
NEWSPAPER OF BETHEL COLLEGE
Volume 72 • Number 10
UPDATE
Mother of
Swedish
Queen dies
STOCKHOLM, Sweden- Alice de Toledo
Sommerlath, the mother
of Sweden's Queen
Silvia, died Sunday. She
was 90.
The news agency TT
said Sommerlath recently
had been visiting
Drottningholm, the royal
residence, but did notsay
where she had died.
Sommerlath was born
in Brazil, and later married Walther
Sommerlath. From 1946
to 1957 they lived in Sao
Paulo, while Sommerlath
was the managing director of the Brazilian subsidiary of a Swedish steel
company. They then
moved to Germany.
At the 1972 Olympics
in Munich, the couple's
daughter Silvia met
Swedish Crown Prince
Carl Gustaf, who later
became King Carl XVI
Gustaf. Silvia had been
working at the Games as
a translator.
Gasoline
prices fall
LOS ANGELES- Gasoline prices fell nearly a
cent per gallon in the
past two weeks, continuing a months-long
decline caused in part
by lower crude oil
prices, an industry analyst said Sunday.
The average price nationwide, including all
grades and taxes, was
about SI .28 per gallon on
Friday, according to the
Lundberg Survey of
10,000 stations nation
Continued on page 2
Brushaber honored
President recieves award
for editing, writing, study
By Tesha Christensen
Staff Writer
President George K.
Brushaber was hon
ored for nearly 40
years of impacting evangelical
communications and publications with the National Association of Evangelical's 1997
James DeForest Murch award.
Clarion; File Photo
President George Brushaber.
The award, given to
Brushaber on March 5, recognizes his high-minded theological study and gift for writing and editing.
"Sometimes we just think
of him as George," Professor
Roger Olson said at a faculty
celebration for Brushaber.
"Even though George may be
'George' to us, we need to realize and acknowledge he is
'Dr. Brushaber': the eminent
evangelical Christian spokesman, educator, journalist and
scholar."
"[Brushaber] is a man of
integrity. He acts from
within,"said RuthConard,his
administrative assistant.
Brushaber has written or
edited six periodicals since his
college days and currently is a
senior editor of Christianity
Today. He received the James
DeForest Murch Award based
on the following criteria: performed editorial functions for
an evangelical publication
throughout a fruitful career,
maintained a high degree of
excellence of editorial skills,
provided leadership and promoted integrity, motivated
readers through personal and
editorial writing and maintained a clear-cut evangelical
testimony.
The James DeForest Murch
award is named after the first
director of the National Association of Evangelicals with
the same name. A skillful journalist, Murch (1892-1973) was
also a man of integrity. His
deep biblical convictions
drove his work towards harmony and unity among Christians. "I have sought to embody the same convictions and
virtues and to serve the church
as Dr. Murch did," Brushaber
continued on page 3
Individual computer users have created
viruses that attatch themselves to everything.
ClarrorV Naomi Pierre
Freshman Andrea Schultz uses the Eudora program.
Viruses reach all-time high
By Hannah Maria Hayes
Variety Editor
Like the cold viruses we
all avoid catching, computer viruses are spread by
contact with the virus. With
the advant of the Internet,
virus transmittal is at an all-
time high. Most computer
viruses are spread through
the Internet and it is possible to get them by downloading infected files to a
computer or through
emails.
When a contaminated
computer is turned on, the
computer will load the virus, similar to loading a
program. If a disk is in the
computer, it will load the
disk and transfer the virus
to the disk. According to
sophomore Lab Manager
Andrew Jornod, using an
infected disk is "like walking around with a cold;" the
virus is spread.
"The viruses we have
around here are viruses that
aren't going to hurt anything," Jornod said. "They
are basically 'leech' viruses
which were made by some
idiot who wants to see his
program flying around."
This type of virus will not
damage anything but attaches itself to everything.
Junior Mike Lawyer, Personal Relations Supervisor,
said that many times the
virus will attach onto the
program students are trying to use and this leads to
most of the problems
Continued on page 3
British cloning spurs debate in U.S.
By Megan Lawton
Bethel News Editor
Researchers in Britain are
reporting they have cloned an
adult mammal for the first
time in a genetic experiment
that some have eagerly
awaited and others have long
dreaded.
Led by Dr. Ian Wilt-nut, the
scientists at the Rosl in Institute
in Edinburgh created a lamb
named "Dolly" using the
DNA from an adult sheep,
Clarion' Julia Taylor
Bethel clones Lisa and Lori Carlson.
startling many who believed it
could never be done.
The experiment was rela
tively easy: a mammary cell' was extracted from a ewe
and its DNA prepared to be accepted by an egg
from another
sheep. The egg's
own DNA was removed and replaced with the
adult DNA by fusing the egg cell with the adult
cell. The cells, now carrying
the adult DNA, began to grow
and divide as normal to form
an embryo. This embryo was
implanted into another ewe,
which gave birth to the cloned
lamb.
Wilmut says that this will
be used for the production of
more health care products.
This would include pharmacologically useful proteins like
the clotting factor needed by
hemophiliacs and the cloning
of superproducer cows that
produce about three times the
Continued on page 3